“It went without saying, at least up until now, that when we imagined growing the largest and most complete database of metal music, part of that vision was the preservation of art and human expression through music. Until #AI, that was a given. The music described on the site is, in some way, played, programmed, and composed by a human being. That still remains an important criterion for us, and it is our belief that AI generated music does not satisfy that requirement.” https://www.metal-archives.com/news/view/id/296
@cory When I worked on the IBM CICS transaction monitor, our customers used to praise new releases when they were really boring (to upgrade to). That showed how much effort was put into backward compatibility, migration, co-existence, etc..
@underlap I love that — it’s one of the things that really makes me weary so to frameworks like Next.js. Every update or upgrade feels like a small battle rather than a simple, iterative improvement.
@lukem it’s emojis poorly matched to musicians and genres as a service. If I had a few more conditionals I figure I can label it as AI and charge the one other person on the planet that thinks this is a good idea for access.